Primary Sources

Resource Description
BBC "Commercial Breaks" Documentary The defining primary source. Paul Anderson's 1984 documentary filmed Imagine Software's rise and then, unexpectedly, captured the July 1984 collapse when bailiffs arrived while cameras were rolling. Aired 13 December 1984, BBC Two.
Watch on YouTube (youtube-nocookie.com)
BBC Archive Clip: Bailiffs and Bandersnatch A shorter BBC archive excerpt focusing specifically on the Bandersnatch announcement, the bailiff arrival, and the company's final hours. Essential companion to the full documentary.
Watch on YouTube (youtube-nocookie.com)
Wikipedia: Imagine Software The primary encyclopedic reference with citation trail for most factual claims about founding, the Megagames, the collapse, and the aftermath.
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Imagine_Software
Resource Description
Spectrum Computing (ZXDB) The most comprehensive database of ZX Spectrum software. Full Imagine Software label listing with release dates, screenshots, and inlay scans for verified titles.
spectrumcomputing.co.uk
World of Spectrum Long-running ZX Spectrum archive. Source for cassette inlay scans, screenshots, and historical documentation of the Spectrum software library.
worldofspectrum.net
MobyGames: Imagine Software Developer and publisher credits for Imagine Software titles, including programmer attributions not available from packaging alone.
mobygames.com

Retrospective Coverage

Start Here

The BBC documentary is the single most important resource. Everything else provides context; the documentary provides evidence.

BBC Commercial Breaks (Official)

BBC Archive's 2025 re-release of the 1984 documentary capturing Imagine Software's collapse. 29 minutes of primary source footage. Start here.

Bruce Everiss: Retro Hour Interview

Bruce Everiss's blog (bruceonthegames.com) is no longer online. This Retro Hour podcast episode (EP164, 2019) is the best available video interview with Imagine's marketing manager, covering the company's culture, strategy, and collapse from a first-person perspective.

Wikipedia: Imagine Software

Well-sourced overview of the company's history, key personnel, game catalogue, and the Megagames collapse. Good starting point; check all citations before relying on specific claims.

Video Essay

Nostalgia Nerd: The Mystery of Bandersnatch

A detailed retrospective examining what is known about the Bandersnatch Megagame - the development, the collapse, the Psygnosis connection, and what survives.

Watch on YouTube (youtube-nocookie.com)

The Catalogues

Wikipedia

Ian Hetherington / Psygnosis

Documents Hetherington's post-Imagine career, the founding of Psygnosis (originally Finchspeed), and the connection between Bandersnatch and Brataccas.

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Psygnosis
Archive

Internet Archive

Digitised copies of period magazines including Your Computer, Crash, and Sinclair User that covered Imagine Software's releases and the Megagames announcements in real time.

archive.org
Database

Lemon 64

C64 game database covering Imagine's Commodore 64 titles including Arcadia and Alchemist ports, with player reviews and technical information.

lemon64.com
Video

Arcadia ZX Spectrum Longplay

Full playthrough of Arcadia on ZX Spectrum - the complete multi-wave experience that 100,000 buyers encountered in 1982.

Watch on YouTube (youtube-nocookie.com)

On Source Reliability

Imagine Software operated for approximately two years and collapsed forty years ago. The primary documentary record is the BBC "Commercial Breaks" footage and the Wikipedia article with its citation trail. Period magazine coverage is valuable but requires verification against ZXDB and MobyGames for specific claims about credits and release dates.

Developer credits for Imagine's ZX Spectrum titles are incomplete by the standards of later documentation. Cassette inlays of the period rarely named individual programmers. Claims about who wrote which game should be checked against MobyGames before treating them as established fact.

The BBC documentary is exceptional among primary sources for being visual and contemporary. It should be considered the most reliable evidence for what Imagine looked like, who was present, and what the atmosphere was during the collapse - even if the participants' accounts within it reflect their own perspectives rather than objective fact.

Jumping Jack ZX Spectrum gameplay screenshot
Jumping Jack (1982) - one of the titles documented in the Spectrum Computing and World of Spectrum archives